Drašković family


The Drašković, also spelled Draskovich in English, is a Croatian noble family, supposedly descended from an old Croatian noble tribe of Kršelac, while others considered the Mogorović family but it is less likely because they had a different coat of arms.
There is no reliable data on the family before the 15th century. The first reliable information is provided by three documents written in Glagolitic alphabet in 1490, kept at the Budapest National Archives. In the 15th century, they owned an estate in Donje Zazično in the Buška parish and around Knin in Dalmatia, which is why Bartol, who started the family's noble line, was in a document from 1520, referred to as "Kninjanin".
In the first half of the 16th century, due to the Turkish threat, Bartol left Zazično and moved to the Kolpa river valley in Croatia proper. He fathered cardinal Juraj I Gašpar who was made baron in 1567, and given Trakošćan Castle in 1569. After that, the family members were referred to as "Trakošćanski". The Drašković family also occupied the Klenovnik Castle, the largest in Croatia before renovating Trakošćan in the mid-19th century. Klenovnik still stands as a hospital.

Notable members

From the 16th to the 19th century, several family members became renowned in Croatia as politicians, army leaders, and religious dignitaries.